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Expert says 6 GHz spectrum is ‘the biggest Wi-Fi advancement in 20 years’ for Canada

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Wi-Fi is about to get a whole lot more exciting in Canada. The Innovation, Science and Economic Development Canada (ISED) announced on May 19 that it has opened up a new swath of Wi-Fi spectrum in the 6 GHz frequency range, tripling the currently available spectrum which will deliver faster Wi-Fi speeds.

This new spectrum will enable Wi-Fi 6E, a new class of Wi-Fi devices that aims to address the congestion of current Wi-Fi systems. Today’s Wi-Fi operated in the 2.4GHz and 5GHz range. With these bands becoming increasingly congested, Wi-Fi devices need new, uncrowded spectrums to reach their max speeds. The new 6 GHz band will provide nearly 1,200 MHz of additional spectrum to support future Wi-Fi devices.

“The new 6 GHz spectrum allocation for Wi-Fi 6E provides exactly what future Wi-Fi-based services need, and that is more bandwidth,” said Chris Beg, wireless systems architect at Cognitive Systems in an email to the publication. “With the 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands, the limited spectrum causes contention as the number of networks and users in a given area increases, making obtaining wider channels difficult and unreliable.”

Although Wi-Fi 6E doesn’t support higher max speeds than Wi-Fi 6, having access to higher frequencies enables wider channels, which makes it more likely to reach that peak speed. Think of channels like a highway: the wider the road is, the more vehicles can travel in parallel.

With the decision, Canada joins the many countries that have opened up 6GHz for Wi-Fi. Although the specific frequencies differ, most countries have extended Wi-Fi into the 6 GHz range to some capacity. The U.S., as well as many countries in South America, Europe and Asia, have all released similar frequency ranges for Wi-Fi.

“Wi-Fi 6E (Wi-Fi in 6 GHz) eliminates capacity limitations of Wi-Fi 5,” explained Carlos Rebellon, director of Americas government relations at Intel, in an email statement. “It will deliver higher speeds, ultra-lower latencies, better energy consumption of connected devices, and it will be perfectly suited in dense environments like the enterprise.”

In addition to improving data transmission performance, Wi-Fi 6E will be able to enhance Internet-of-Things (IoT) and specialized use cases like Wi-Fi sensing.

“More bandwidth is great news for sensing applications because obtaining a wider channel becomes more practical and more deterministic,” said Beg. “Utilizing a wider channel for Sensing is equivalent to taking a picture with a colour camera vs a black and white camera, resulting in a more detailed image.”

There’s big money to be made, too. The Wi-Fi Alliance estimated that the global value of Wi-Fi will reach $4.9 trillion in 2025. In countries with a similar population to Canada, Wi-Fi Alliance estimates a $22 billion value for Wi-Fi in 2025.

Wi-Fi 6E devices will be divided into three power categories:

Because outdoor devices can potentially step over the service frequencies of fixed satellite services (FSS), ISED has required all outdoor Wi-Fi 6E devices to implement automatic frequency coordination (AFC) systems. In a nutshell, AFC checks with a database to see what frequencies are already reserved in the local to prevent interference. This is a key technology for enabling outdoor Wi-Fi 6 devices.

With the standard now set, Canada can expect to see indoor Wi-Fi 6E devices by the end of 2021. Outdoor standard power devices will arrive in early-to-mid 2022.

“The 6 GHz spectrum amendment in Canada will bring the biggest Wi-Fi advancement in 20 years for all Canadians,” said Rebellon.

But the market is already looking ahead. Although Wi-Fi 6E devices have just landed, the industry is already expecting Wi-Fi 7 to arrive by 2024 with another massive boost in bandwidth.

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